For thousands of Jews, Israel still doesn’t feel safe after the October 7 attacks. So they’re leaving

By South China Morning Post | Created at 2024-12-20 15:43:22 | Updated at 2024-12-20 20:11:48 4 hours ago
Truth

Leaving Israel is easier, Shira Z. Carmel thinks, by saying it is just for now. But she knows better.

For the Israel-born singer and an increasing number of relatively well-off Israelis, the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack shattered any sense of safety and along with it, Israel’s founding promise: to be the world’s safe haven for Jews.

That day, thousands of Hamas militants blew past the country’s border defences, killed 1,200 Israelis and dragged 250 more into Gaza in a siege that caught the Israeli army by surprise and stunned a nation that prides itself on military prowess.

This time, during what became known as Israel’s 9/11, the army did not come for hours.

Ten days later, a pregnant Carmel, her husband and their toddler boarded a flight to Australia, which was looking for people in her husband’s profession.

And they spun the explanation to friends and family as something other than permanent – “relocation” is the easier-to-swallow term – acutely aware of the familial strain and the shame that have shadowed Israelis who leave for good.

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